'Digital Restoration From Start to Finish' 2nd edition guides you
step-by-step through the entire process of restoring old photographs
and repairing new ones using Adobe Photoshop, Picture Window, and now
Photoshop Elements, for those that don't have Photoshop.

You will learn how to restore faded and damaged photographic prints, films and glass
plates, in both black and while and colour. This highly illustrated
guide includes over 70 task-orientated "how-to's" providing solutions
to common, frustrating problems. Nothing is left out, from choosing the right hardware and
software and getting the photographs into the computer, to getting the
finished photo out of the computer and preserving it for posterity.

Correct uneven exposure and do dodging and burning-in with adjustment layers

Hand-tint your photographs easily

Correct skin tones with airbrush layers

Clean up dust and scratches speedily and effectively

Repair small and large cracks with masks and filters

Eliminate tarnish and silvered-out spots from a photograph in just a few steps

Minimize unwanted print surface textures

Erase mildew spots

Eliminate dots from newspaper photographs

Increase sharpness and fine detailand

Maximize print quality

The detailed real-world examples in this book will teach you how to produce great restorations by combining different techniques and tools. In clear and easy to understand text with over 500 illustrations, this book provides step-by-step instructions, and explains what inexpensive alternatives to Photoshop are available for you to use, as well as highlighting Photoshop plug-ins that can do restoration
work quickly.

Reviews:
'This thorough compendium of digital photo-restoration techniques, by PT contributing editor Ctein, explains almost anything you could need to know about repairing aged or damaged photographs using a scanner and Photoshop (with occasional help from some additional software)' - Photo Techniques, Mar-Apr 2007 [review of the 1st edition]

'The book features restoration tips and methods for handling a range of deteriorated images by using a variety of tools, and then shows how these techniques can be applied to contemporary photographs that have poor color or tonal rendition, as well as misexposed prints' - Photographic Trade News, February 2007 [review of the 1st edition]